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Lewis Bosworth Oct 2016
She is the female lead
And plays a 91-year-old
Grandmother.

He is the male lead
And plays a 21-year-old
Grandson.

This is the first day
Of the Theatre 101
Boot camp.

A small but faithful
Group of fans
Plays the audience.

An aside – the fans
Are not culture-blind –
(pause).

Life’s small moments
Are acted out by
Veteran hoofers.

In the back of the
house – in darkness –
sits the director.

Love and healing,
Sensitivity, humor –
Trenchant script.

Two class acts –
Three weeks until
Les trois coups.

Awards, prizes –
Applause –
Ovation.

© Lewis Bosworth, 10/2016
Lewis Bosworth Oct 2016
today
I put on a
tie

a gesture toward
formal dress

like a now-a-days
woman
might wear
a skirt

or
a teenaged
boy
a belt


© Lewis Bosworth  10/2016
Lewis Bosworth Oct 2016
Do we simulate or
emulate?
Stimulate?
These similes
we toss out so
cleverly.

To rhyme or not isn’t
the real question.

Down deep in our
inner being
is empathy.
Capture or
don’t make a point.

What are the lines
and spaces?
Do they look at
or peer about
a soul, a brain?

The emphasis must
really be
******-fiction or
nothingness.

A vacuum or perhaps
a void,
the truth or hurtful
lies.

Are lines and syllables
written, etched
out for us or them?

We live by poetic
license, using
a photo ID or a
nom de plume.



But here is the final
secret: our
lines are emotion,
or just an
echo?  

© Lewis Bosworth, 10/2016
Lewis Bosworth Sep 2016
You’re stuck with a leaky lifeboat?
Cherish your vote.

You seek the system to berate –
Join the debate.

If daily news puts you in stress,
Clean up the mess.

Election time brings no redress –
Polls and ballots you have to bear
If civil rights you wish to share.
Cherish your vote.  Join the debate.  Clean up the mess.

© Lewis Bosworth, 9/16
This is an old poetic form called an *Ovillejo* made popular by Cervantes, 16th century.
Lewis Bosworth Sep 2016
Before he retired –
aged sixty-two –
life was a meaningful
calling for her.

Not over-radical,
more gentle and
secular – but post-
suffrage.

Her children had
left the nest, and
the story of Esther
came to mind.

She writes poetry
and helps others
less fortunate than
she is.

He puts food on the
table, and she gives
meaning to the
marital vows.

She never wanted
to emulate Steinem
or Millett – maybe
Eleanor Roosevelt.

She neither wears
a bra nor burns one
– competition only a
four-syllable word.

A day in her life is
one hand on the soup
kettle, the other on
a protest sign.

One week a month
she volunteers
at a church shelter
for the homeless.

One day a week
she picks up the
mail for a neighbor
who is bed-ridden.

When night time
comes and she lies
in bed, he massages
her feet in silence.

She hasn’t retired –
never will – not in the
shadows of the night
nor morning’s shine.

© Lewis Bosworth, 9/16
Lewis Bosworth Sep 2016
The second amendment might
As well be the sixty-ninth, for all
The life-long days it saves by
The transparent and glossy shields
Adorning blue-skied uniforms.

The strike zone is limited to the
Mobility-enhanced limbs, out of
Reach of the cardiac plateau, in
A line guarded by “I heart NYC”
Leftover campaign buttons.

Crowds question the timeless yet
Disintegrating rhetoric, and they
Sing along with misspelled threats
To sanguine attempts at love and
War, while grade schoolers watch.

What’s missing from this libretto
Is a slogan like “if they go low, we
Go high” and the money to borrow
It, or the right to use the copyright,
As long as it doesn’t get ******.

“Now hear this,” bellows the man in
The crow’s nest, stepping in front
Of his stepson who brandishes a
BB gun proudly in his arms, “the
Curfew starts at midnight!”

Dona nobis pacem, a canon of
Faith, is hummed by the last ranks
Of veterans in camouflage, hoping
To initiate a temporary calm among
The bleak and ****** crew.

A clown-faced poet attempts to draw
A smile, as she calls for an absentee
Ballot, a circuitous frontage road
Away from destiny, some think,
And a short breath of recess.

“Take away their weapons,” hollers
A very pregnant woman, who goes
Into labor, blaming the guns for her
Untimely reward, and for a moment,
Just minutes, the midwifery begins.

All this while a small coterie of men
Gathers, silently taking in the show,
Unnoticed in their pretense, but
Sporting the heritage caps of the
NRA, stars and stripes in their lapels.

The disingenuous players in this sad
Drama are about to fold their tents,
To chicken out, to return to tacos
And beer, when stillness breaks,
So much so that crickets rule.

A small boy crosses the street, his
Smile contagious, his gait strong
As he approaches the men and
Says “I am you before now, be
Of peace and good cheer.

“My commandments have no
Amendments, no magic exceptions,
No golden calves, no wicked step-
Mothers, only a heart and soul,
I am the moral of your story.”  

© Lewis Bosworth, 2016
Lewis Bosworth Sep 2016
suffer the young poets to come
they are already good – most –
what they need – like it or not –
is a heavy-handed teach with a
heart of steel and a mind of
compassion….  The other way
around?  the behavior education
model?  nope.  Whitman
wannabe’s will do it on their own?
nope.  Dickinson’s to be discovered
in yellow paper letters in death?  
spinsterhood to be canonized like
Lorca?  there are laureates in front
of me, standing tall at the podium –
life is to be lived, words to be spit
out with relish, juxtaposing music
with tears – letting ambition curdle
and toss away transience – Amen.

© Lewis Bosworth, 9/16
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